You just completed teacher training, now what?

You’re ready. You’ve taught to your friends, family, your neighbors, and even your pet chihuahua. Now you are heading out from safe waters. Your new adventure and next step might be a studio, a gym, or a community center.

Have fun and use these tips and reminders to guide you.

1. Keep it Simple

Use the KISS method. Keep it Simple for Students. As a new teacher, you will be most likely attracting students who are new to yoga as well. You do not need to wow them, knock their socks off, or hit a home run. Some teachers feel as if they have to throw the entire kitchen sink at them via creative sequencing, quotes and stories. The hope is that it may impress them or that it is needed for students to have a powerful yoga experience. But for students, less is more. People have enough on their plates to be bogged down and confused with complex instruction and poses, different language, overuse of yoga jargon, etc. Just showing up for students is an incredible accomplishment. They are already learning something new by just being in class.

2. Be Easy on Yourself

You will always teach one of the three following classes:

One. The one you plan to teach

Two. The one you actually teach

Three. The one you should have taught

Number three can stifle new teachers. I should have said this, I should have down this, etc. Some teachers will spend the entire ride home second guessing what they said and did. Learn from each class you taught and move on.

3. Use one student in the room to teach to the entire class.

Photo: Eva Lin

For new teachers, all the students in the room may be overwhelming. To stay present and connected, look at one student when you are teaching alignment and speak to “their body.” For example, say you are teaching Warrior 1, you would look at one persons feet and speak to the foundation of the pose. Not only does that individual person benefit, but the whole room does as well, because you are connecting physically and you are present. It lands powerfully for the whole class.

4. Have a Cheat Sheet Nearby

As a new teacher, you already have enough things on your plate, such as memorizing a sequence, alignment cues, timing, etc. Make it easy on yourself and have a notebook nearby with your sequence, reminders, or whatever you need. It’s okay if you freeze or get stuck. If you do freeze, put your students in Down Dog, grab your notebook and get back on track and regain your composure.

5. Don’t Sell Yourself Short

Like attracts like. You will most likely have students new to yoga if you are new teacher. Simply, do your best. It is amazing the stories that we hear from brand new teachers. We have heard countless stories where students have attended their first class from a brand new teacher, and that specific class had a profound impact on that new students life and hooked them on yoga. The practice is potent. Just getting people to move their bodies, to experience freedom, to clean their minds with deep breathing is super powerful. Remember when we teach, we teach for them. Share yourself. Share your love of yoga. Students will pick up on this and it will come back to you.

Comments

36865612 Responseshttp%3A%2F%2Fwww.elephantjournal.com%2F2012%2F07%2Ffive-tips-for-new-yoga-teachers%2FFive+Tips+for+New+Yoga+Teachers.2012-07-17+22%3A33%3A28Sean+Conleyhttp%3A%2F%2Fwww.elephantjournal.com%2F%3Fp%3D368656 to “Five Tips for New Yoga Teachers.”

[…] week, Elephant Journal published a piece written by Sean Conley listing 5 Tips For New Yoga Teachers. I have been mulling over the mistakes I’ve made as a yoga teacher, both in the earlier days […]

[…] I am by no means an expert and my learning process is ever-changing and evolving as a teacher. I’m always trying new things in class. I am just starting to figure out my teaching style and find my voice as an instructor. I actually […]

Great article, really important to keep your focus on simplicity. All my favorite teachers do! But I also think it's important to make sure you check out this article for some more advice, little less yogic, more practical tho – http://www.yoga-assist.com/professional-yoga-liab…

Great advice for any teacher. #3 I think really limits the teachers vision plus what if some one else is horribly aligned n could hurt themselves? I ur only watching one student u will miss the one that needs the most help.

Also if u know there are brand new students place them where u can see them clearly. They may not like this cause they tend to hide in the back.